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Story

I received an unexpected email from a woman calling herself Hanna Heienko, and from the very first lines it felt off. She wrote to me as if she already knew about my past attempt to help another Ukrainian woman escape the war. That alone made me pause — I never shared that story publicly, so I immediately wondered how she even found my email. Hanna tried to sound legitimate by giving me a full set of personal details: her full name, date of birth (March 8, 1988), place of birth (Bakhmut), an exact address in Zatoka — even a passport number, KM88456, which she conveniently said was expired. It was obvious she provided all of this to appear trustworthy, but something about the precision felt rehearsed, almost scripted. Then she moved to the real point: money. According to her, she’s “stuck in Ukraine” and cannot proceed with anything in her life until she renews her passport in Kyiv. For that, she claims to need exactly 1,200 euros “for travel and renewal.” No explanation of how she obtained my contact information, no real connection to me — just a carefully framed emotional appeal tied to the fact that I once helped another woman from a war zone. The whole message was built on psychological pressure. She tried to make me feel responsible, as if my previous attempt to help someone else somehow obligates me to help her now. She implied that officials are blocking her path, that she has no one else, and that I’m the only person who can save her from being “stuck.” Everything was designed to make me act quickly, without thinking, without verifying anything. The pattern was obvious: unsolicited contact, overly detailed personal backstory, dramatic circumstances, and a very specific amount of money for a supposed bureaucratic emergency. It was a textbook setup — a romance-style scam wrapped in the context of war and humanitarian concern. I didn’t send any money. But the moment she shifted from emotional storytelling to requesting a large payment, it became clear who she was: just another scammer trying to turn compassion into cash.

Additional Info

Country, City: Ukraine, Bakhmut

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